Example sentences of "[conj] not for a [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | a false indication that a price is expected to be increased or reduced or maintained ( whether or not for a particular period ) ; |
2 | What 's happened is , of course , that as the costs have fallen and the micros have come in through the door so they 're very much smaller , erm it all becomes possible for the whole of society and not for a tiny elite . |
3 | His brief was to design an item of cutlery with and not for a disabled student . |
4 | He ruled that damages were due for the effects of surfactants but not for a small presence of phosphates . |
5 | I 'd heard tales about some people having seen an old man down there but not for a long while , he would n't hurt anyone so your lad need n't be scared of him . ’ |
6 | He shrugged his shoulders , ‘ At times I like to speak English , but not for a long time . |
7 | ‘ Before , but not for a long time now , ’ Maggie admitted reluctantly and Rose did not want to learn any more . |
8 | It is a combination that I have used in the past but not for a long time , although blue and white stripes in fabrics are a perennial favourite of mine . |
9 | Been to it before but not for a long time . |
10 | The above description of the expectations-augmented Phillips curve allows for the existence of a short-run trade-off between unemployment and inflation , but not for a long-run trade-off . |
11 | They object to a little cotton apron on the mice which is made from a baby 's dress — it was suitable for a baby but not for a stuffed mouse to wear ! ’ |
12 | Even more striking is the example provided by Francis Bacon , that most ardent apologist for useful science — but not for a Copernican universe . |
13 | Mr Mortimer , currently at work on a play for the BBC and a drama series for Meridian , tells me he hopes there will be another Rumpole series : ‘ But not for a little while . ’ |
14 | He 's right , but not for a little while . |